The battalion was handing out antidepressants like free candy on your way to the PX to get the magazines and iPods and protein powder and energy drinks you were taking with you back to war.
Back in Iraq, he deteriorated as a soldier. He was in a new AO, hard by the Euphrates, and car bombs went off at mosque time. The civil war had started. He could not function. He fell asleep on watch. A rugby playing sergeant known for being hard smoked him in MOP gear in the noon heat, called him a shitbag, a bottom feeder, a retard, etcetera.
Skinner drank five canteens of water and the water kept running out of him, his eyes unfocused, the sun blazing off his sweat, the rubber suit lying on the sand at his feet like the empty shell of himself, a human skin.
Everyone in the war had changed, the war had changed, and Skinner’s strangeness barely showed. It was chalked up to the war, as if it were logical. The war itself was always ever stranger. Within his unit, he became identified with a group of soldiers called the Shitbag Crew. A shitbag was a wag bag, which they called a wookie bag. They said Wookies, Yo, when they bumped fists, and it was like saying we’re staying alive. They had superstitions, rituals, which became ever more involved. A tribal life began. Some of the gangs within the infantry were involved in murder. They dropped wire or weapons on corpses. A gunny from Akron, Ohio, was the capo of a death squad.
Skinner was mentally ill, logging day after day in a combat zone, compounding the damage: cuts that wouldn’t heal, back pain, diarrhea, hearing loss, double vision, headaches, pins and needles in his hands, insomnia, apathy, rage, grief, self-hatred, depression, despair.
People laughed at him, watching him trying to lift the water bull.
Two Iraqi men came up to Skinner, ostensibly to try to tell him that they were not insurgents. Feeling threatened, Skinner began kicking out, his foot connected and a man fell back and Skinner fired his M4 and shot him. The other was trying to hold onto his weapon. Skinner’s buddies came running. They forced the barrel of the weapon around until it was on the man, who started writhing and shouting. Skinner triggered the weapon, killing him in cold blood.
His war went by one eighteen-hour watch at a time, feeling the jump of his own adrenaline-fed heartbeat, thinking how many more of these heartbeats he would have to wait through to get through the next minute, the next hour, the next eighteen. His thinking was flattened by drugs, fatigue, repetitive thoughts. But the war led you into the mystical thinking of someone in a psych ward. He added time in new ways. Today he wouldn’t die if he did ten deadlifts with his rifle.
When he was rotated back to the United States, he ran into Freebird outside a mall with his family, and the man wouldn’t return Skinner’s greeting. He just looked at Skinner and spat on the asphalt and stared at him aggressively until Skinner walked away.
Jake emailed him:
Skin my friend it been a long time. i wanted to write but had to learn first. this device i use my mouth. u should c me. i seem retarded b/c my mind trapped. frustrating to be thot of as broken. especially for us grunts the doc talks to me like 5 yr old.!!!! let me c him do our job guy..
i cant stand when people use word brave hero ets. i would do all again
all my wheelchr, computer comes from donations made me cry
my plan to go to nyc w/ u — negative for reasons obvious. ive decided college is next war for me — want to untrap my mind. so focused on therapy havent had time think big picture. worried am i going to quit lots of thoughts of what we saw — surreal. yes anger. alos a gift something nobody else knows
i love you my brother
jake
Skinner went to an exit meeting in the base auditorium where GIs were told how to make their military service sound useful on a resume. It was a sunny winter day and the demobilized soldiers wore fleece tops over their leaf-patterned cammies and black watch caps like bank robbers in the movies. The blue sky was clear and cold. The bare trees poked up into the sky like bundles of wicker. During the intermission, the soon-to-be civilian soldiers stood smoking in groups, some with canes, holding glossy pamphlets bearing the words Once a Warrior, Always a Warrior.
The news came that Jake would not be making it to college. He’d had too many surgeries and, at last, an infection he had thrown off previously returned with renewed ferocity and attacked the sheathing of his spinal cord. His parents came from Virginia to be with him for the last ten days while he existed in a coma. The machine that breathed for him moved its piston up and down. His parents slept on chairs in the waiting area by the elevators past the nurse’s station. They stood over Jake’s bed and touched their son’s tattooed arm and examined his yellowed face for signs of returning life. He had become aquiline. He had been given a tracheotomy and a hose went into a gauze-packed hole in his neck and was held in place by tape. The room smelled the way skin smells when it is covered by tape for months and starts breaking down. He was not coming back, and they made the decision to let him go. The nurse turned off three switches and they waited at the bedside while he stopped living.
We love you, Jake, his father said, still wearing the tie he taught high school history in, loosened, over a plaid shirt. He emailed Jake’s friends.
This was the news that Skinner received before he went to New York alone, holding to the idea that if he partied hard enough, he’d eventually succeed in having a good time and would start wanting to live again.
Broadway in the daylight. People streaming out of the subway, moving in clusters that broke apart into fragments and passed through other columns of people like a strainer. He smelled pretzels. A black Denali with the driver’s hand visible, resting on the steering wheel, an athlete’s hand, an expensive watch. All the girls wore Eskimo boots. Their hair bounced behind them. There were so many it was unbelievable. There were office chicks smoking outside the entranceways and there were guys in shirtsleeves coming out to smoke with them, young guys in slacks, just ordinary guys who had not drafted themselves after high school, and he heard the normal sound of their voices as he went by and the whole thing sounded strange.
He stayed at a hostel by the Port Authority, drinking and surfing the web. There were drag queens staggering sideways across the broken pavement when he went out for beer. He bought a bag of weed and smoked it with the window open wrapped in his poncholiner listening to the sirens. He checked his email, typed Hey dud whatsup, and hit send. No one wrote back from his unit. A block away, next to the peep shows and the Foo Ying Kitchen, he found a strip bar, the same blond hair and tan tits he had seen on the highway coming in. In a few days, his bank account was down a grand already. Awesome, he said, and toasted himself with a Red Bull. His clothes lay all over his bunk — jeans from American Eagle, shirts to go out and get laid in — bought with hundreds of dollars in hazard duty pay. He got dressed and went out drinking. At the Blarney Rock, where there was an American flag behind the bar and a memorial to the Towers and the faces of the fallen, a few guys bought him beers and clinked bottles with him and called him family. That’s it? he thought. But he stayed pleasant, watched the game. When he was falling down, they tried to offer him a ride. He left without speaking. Take it easy brother, they said. Let him go. Let him go. His mother emailed him from Pittsburgh to tell him he was wasting his life. He took his meds with beer and lay on his bunk with his tattooed arm over his face and his tan boot on the wall, the Chinese characters saying No Pain No Gain, and watched Sconyers convulsing in his head. The others at the hostel said, You were making noises in your sleep.